A ONCE feared pro-Indonesian militia has resurfaced in East Timor, provoking
new violence and border tension in the vulnerable Oecussi enclave.

A coded UN cable dated October 12, which has been obtained by The Australian,
identifies the "Okto" militia as being responsible for the suspension
of tense border talks with Indonesia.

"A PNTL (East Timor police) film footage identified uncontrolled people
in the area, including a militia by the name of Okto," said UN East Timor
head Sukehiro Hasegawa in a cable to under-secretary-general for peacekeeping
Jean Marie Guehenno in New York.

Acting on a request from East Timorese President Xanana Gusmao, Mr Hasegawa
said he had travelled to the border village of Passabe to broker talks, which
were aimed at "reducing rising tensions caused by incidents of violence in
areas of the Oecussi border".

A "detailed briefing" from the East Timorese leadership had earlier
raised concerns that Indonesian border troops showed "reluctance" to
take preventative measures to stop a number of recent violent incidents, he
said.

On October 4, East Timorese police fired warning shots to disperse a mob of
Indonesians who had crossed 500m into the enclave near the villages of Nazacusse,
Oemeno, Kobe and Suco Bobometo, Mr Hasegawa wrote. Five days later, Indonesian
border troops stood by as a mob of machete-wielding militia set fire to crops.

Jakarta claims all West Timor-based anti-independence militias have been
disbanded.

The militias were responsible for a wave of violence in the lead-up to and
weeks following the historic UN-backed autonomy ballot in 1999.

Stunned by the landslide no vote, the militias laid waste to towns and
villages, killing more than 1500 people and driving more than 300,000 over East
Timor's western border into Indonesian West Timor.